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= DAILY RKER, NEW YORK, TU DAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1934 Page CHANGE —THE—— WORLD! -By Sender Garlin (Batting for Michael Gold) To the Readers of This Column, Comrades and Friends: Tam taking a little time off to do a special piece of work. in my absence Sender Garlin will take my place. He is an able young Communist journalist, and I know he will doa good piece of work. Good luck, Sender, and Auf Wiedersehen, hasta luego, a riverderci, so long, etc., to the readers for a while. Comradely, MIKE GOLD. They Both Won—The Battle of the Century (Copyright by Soviet American Newspaper Alliance) YOSTERTON, U. 8. A., Feb. 26, 1950.—With the discovery here today of the remains of two pre-historic monsters found in deadlock, the ex- pedition of the Museum of Natural History has made s signal contribution to scientific knowledge. As your special correspondent I was in a particularly advantageous position to observe at first hand mammal types which were, it seems, quite common in the capitalist era, but which are now entirely extinct. ‘The sensational discovery, which sheds additional light on life in the Pre-U. S.-Soviet era, was made at 4:15 this motning. The members of the expedition were particularly elated to find the remains of a demagogorius, @ type said to be especially active in the previous era, but now extremely rare. Lying locked, their bones intermingled, as if they had died in a death grapple, were the remains of a specie demagogorios and social- fascistorius. A single moment's investigation sufficed to convince the members of the Expedition that they had discovered the same species that had been recently unearthed in France, Germany, Italy, Greece, India and Austria. It is an extinct mammal, fossil remains of which occurred until quite vecently in a number of minor countries. ‘These consist chiefly of teeth and bones of the head. An entire skull found this morning resembled the one obtained from the Lower Pliocene beds of Eppelsheim, Hesse-Darmstadt, in 1836. It measured 4% feet in length and 3 feet in breadth, and indicated an animal exceeding an ele- phant in size. The upper jaw was apparently destitute of incisor and ine teeth, but it possessed five molars on each side, with a correspond- ing number in the jaw beneath. ‘The most remarkable feature, however, consisted in the front part of the lov-* jaw, being bent downwards and bearing two tusk-like incisors also directed downwards and backwards. Demagogorius and social- fascistorius are both members of the group Proboscidaea. For some reason, yet to be determined by sociologists, they were mortal enemies, despite the very great similarity in their structure and their habits. ds 7 * We Reconstruct the Scene JN RECONSTRUCTING the circumstances which resulted in this death- grapple between the demagogorius and social-fasefstorius, the scientists on the Expedition were, considerably aided by the discovery of a papyrus. By the aid of a powerful magnifying glass which increases the image 5,000,000 times, the scientists obtained the data necessary to clarify the circumstances surrounding the gory battle. Under the powerful magnifying glass was revealed what was appar- ently a publication of the pre-Soviet era, evidently the work of social- fascistorius. The first words discernable under the magnifying glass were NEW LEADER, and the date as Saturday, February 24, 1934, After six hours of painstaking and intensive translation, the archaeo- logists presented to me for transmission to our readers the following his- torfeal document: “THE DEBATE THAT WILL THRILL NEW YORK! NORMAN THOMAS TO BATTLE HUEY P. LONG! GET YOUR TICKETS ‘The special Marxian sociologists attached to the Expedition explained hat Thomas was apparently the chief representative of the specie social- fascistorius, and that Huey P. Long was one of the outstanding examplars of the specie demagogorius, Further translation of the hieroglyphics revealed how the social- faacistori heralded the coming death struggle between these two champions. “It will be a most amazing debate when Huey Long, the Louisiana ‘Kingfish’ and Norman Thomas meet on the platform of Mecca Temple, New York City. “Two colorful personalities and a subject that goes to the heart of the problems that are bedeviling the whole world. “Is our present system doomed? Can it survive? Can an injection of oxygen or adran¢lin or a limited redistribution of wealth give it 4 new lease of life? “If it is doomed WHAT WILL TAKE ITS PLACE? “Norman Thomas, national spokesman of ®¢ Socialist Party, propagandist and writer, teacher and adviser of thousands, has one opinion. “Huey Long, the most amazing figure in the national political arena since the days of Ben Tillman, James K. Vardaman and ‘Sockless Jerry’ Simpson, has another.” 1 They Say “Thomas Might Have, But He Didn't” Bl So-iined THOMAS threw in his lot with the Socialist Party ... He did not flinch. Norman Thomas was a minister then in a nice, com- fortable berth. He might have played ball and secured an even better berth, more comfort, more perquisites, honor, praise, rewards for stringing along with the crowd. “But that isn’t the kind of man Norman Thomas is. He doesn’t string along. He said to himself, ‘I like that man Hillquit. I like the fight he is putting up. I like the things he stands for, I like the crowd he trains with. I'm for him. I'm for his crowd and his creed, “That is Norman Thomas—the kind of man who finds out what he stands for, and then STANDS FOR IT! He has stood for it for nearly two decades . . . He has made amazing runs for Mayor of New York and President of the United States... He is a truly na- tional figure.” Tiluminating as this description of the specie social-fascistorius was to the members of our Expedition, the data regarding the champion of demagogorius was even more revealing, “Huey P. Long is a different kind of a man. “Huey Long is a scrapper, and he has fought with nearly everybody that does not agree with him—and outside of his followers very few people agree with him on anything. But he has enough followers to be in the Senate and the ‘Kingfish’ of his state, “Huey Long doesn’t like bankers and multi-millionaires. He believes that concentration of wealth has caused the troubles we are passing through. “He has worked out a way that, he says, will save the situation. “Limit fortunes to no more than ONE MILLION DOLLARS.” “It will be a real debate—a real scrap, with no holds barred. Every- body will have a great time. The debate will be the thrill of a lifetime, ‘The chairman will be Dr. Henry Neumann, leader of the Brooklyn Ethical Society, lecturer, orator, lover of humanity, and wit.” . . sent Where It Belongs HURRIED conference of tne members of our Expedition immediately Alavivat itu saathag ot tna piigan Ga vec doe that this dis- covery would be a unique addition to scientific knowledge, and that it should be sent by courier at once to the American Soviet Museum of Queer Quirks of Capitalist Civilization. I consider myself signally honored by being ; ciected to deliver personaly io the Museum the findings of the Expedition, What’s Doing in the Workers) Schools of U.S. HAVE an interesting letter from a student in the Cleve- | land Workers’ School, from which | we will quote as much as we have/ room for: | | “To the Editor of the Daily Worker: “Cleveland Workers School has had very favorable comment in the Daily Worker. It was mentioned | |twice in Mike Gold’s column and has already received national at- tention. The school has a con-| venient downtown location. It oc-| cupies a large second story. There are two classroms, a library, a large Office, and a hall with a seating | capacity of 250. The rooms are | bright and airy. The numerous windows are hung with neat, red- bordered curtains. Everything is kept spotless by a devoted attend- ant. Comrades travelling through say it is the most attractive head- | quarters of any revolutionary or- | ganization in the country. The| | revolutionary workers of Cleveland | | are justly proud of their school. “Yet this beautiful exterior con- tioned—the Ruthenberg library. blush to think of it. The shelves are up, the tables and chairs are in, there is @ filing cabinet and desk—everything but books, I mean revolutionary books, of course. There is a text book on Physics, Gregg’s Shorthand, Fielding’s “Tom Jones.” But Marx is represented by Se- lected Essays and Lenin and Engels not at al.” There is no room to quote all of this letter, but the student goes on to say that the school itself should buy books instead of expecting class-conscious workers, who have bought their revolutionary litera~ ture with difficulty, to part with it. “This beautiful room is going to} waste. A portion of rent goes to maintaining a room that brings no return. Why, this library could be- come a hotbed of revolutionary propaganda! Cleveland’s famous public library has only a few of the work of Marx, Lenin, Engels, which don’t even begir to serve the needs of | the movement. There are so many students here eager to read the) works they can’t afford to buy. And the Ruthenberg library has nothing but its name!” | Well, how about it, comrades of Cleveland? . . TRAINING NEW TEACHERS Workers School of New York has instituted a system of co-in- structors to meet the growing demand for new teachers due to the rapid | growth of the school itself and the numerous classes and study groups outside, who come to the school for instructors. Comrades with prac- tical experience in the Party or League, and promising students that have come to the attention of the teachers in the classes, are selected to be co-instructors. The co-in- structor is assigned to a certain class to work with the instructor for one or two terms, first as an observer, and>then as an assistant: If the instructor thinks it advisable, he al- lows the co-instructor to take over @ session or two or part of a session or two, during the term. eer atk 3 DEPARTMENT CONFERENCES The co-instructor also attends De- partment Conferences, which have been introduced this year: At these department conferences, which meet about once in two weeks, the teachers who teach one subject — such as Principles of Communism, for in- stance—meet together to discuss the subject matter of the next lesson and the best method of handling it. A great many of the present in- structors in the Workers School in New York began as co-instructors, and with the present demand for more instructors, it will probably be necessary to assign @ co-instructor to every teacher in the school, until it will be possible to organize a group for intensive training of instructors, and even then it will be necessary to combine the theoretical training with this system of observation and work in the classes. . ATTENDANCE The Harlem Workers School has sent in the analysis of its student body in its Winter Term, and re- ports that of its 202 students, 75 are Negroes, more than half are work- ers in shops. To combat poor attendance in some of the classes, they are writ- ing to the organizations urging them to check up on the students whom they sent to the school on scholar- ships. They also send notice to these organizations instructing them not to assign students to tasks on the nights they have classes, Site aa The Workers School of the Co- operative Colony, 2700-2800 Bronx Park East, Bronx, N. Y., reports the opening of a new term with classes in Political Economy, Principles of Communism, Negro Problems, and English. They are still taking regis- tration for these courses at the local Shule, Britten St. corner Bronx Park East. Bx ee He HATHAWAY AND BROWDER SPEAK FOR NATIONAL TRAINING SCHOOL { O lectures will be given for the benefit of the National Trainfhg. School, which is now in its eighth week, Clarence Hathaway, Editor of the Daily Worker, will speak on “Revolution Knocks at the Door of Europe” at the Irving Plaza, 17 Irv- ing Place, New York, on Friday, March 2nd, at 8:30 p. m. Earl Browder, General Secretary of the Communist Party, speaks at the same place the following Friday, March 9th. column appears every Tues- day. Workers, students and teach- ers, and all others interested in Workers’ Schools, write reports and comments to A. Markoff, School News Cotumn, Room 391, 35 East th St, N.Y. ¢ Workers Mass By ORRICK JONES ST. LOUIS.—To protect a revolutionary mural, done by unemployed worker art students on the walls of the old Courthouse here, a large group of workers gathered in Joe Jone’s free public art class for unemployed, and checkmated police efforts to destroy the collective art work. The mural which the workers defended is 37 feet by 17 feet, done on the wall of one of the old court chambers of the abandoned courthouse It represents workers’ lives on the Mississippi levee and shows among other things a demonstration of the victorious nut-pickers’ strike of last summer recruiting Negro workers from a Mississippi baptizing. ice Stage and Screen “Peace On Earth” Celebrates! Its 100th Performance | “Peace On Earth,” the anti-war | play at the Civic Repertory Theatre| BY JOHN L. SPIVAK i} celebrated its 100th performance on The Theatre Union, pro-| CHARLOTTE, N. C.—Te Saturday. ducer of the play, is planning to stage| . 1 Paul Peters’ “Stevedore,” and will| tile mill owners do not usually present the production some time late||jye in the town where mills next month, | S = Jents take Jane Cowl will have the leading|OPerate. Superintend re ere Se a “Sweet Bells Jangled,” a new|care of the actual running of Play by Reginald Lawrence. Others| usiness. The number of work- in the cast include Minor Watson | ore hs a mill naturally depe and Mary Phillips. | its size, but they run an; Hiram Sherman’s farce, “Too Much} ynder 100 to 500 persons. Party,” has been placed in rehez | superintendents a fearful of dis- by William B. Friedlander, and will g their affa! with strang open here early in Marcia Janet M even though the: Leay, Viola Swayne, Philip Truex and| stranger be prop- Grant Richards are in the cast. jerly introduced Le A ERE {by the secret: “Palooka” With Durante jof the Chambe Opens Today At Rivoli) “Palooka,” Jimmy Durante's Jatest | wags oF sereen effort, will open today at. the | tndent’s Bi ic Rivoli Theatre. Lupe Velez anda|*? run the mil! Stuart Erwin are in the supporting | Without too many cast. violations of th The Palace Theatre is now showing Te*tlle code anc “Carolina,” with Lionel Barrymore | ‘° get = ae and Janet Gaynor in the principal| "OT oub of At roles. The stage show is headed by | ro ye ae pepe Ds Jack Pepper in “The Spice of Life.” | ” in ds tees 4 “Orient Express,” with Heather An-| ‘ied for mill: workers. gel, Norman Foster and Ralph Mor-| ("to talk to mill. supe gan, is the new film now playing at they refer you to the “Ti the Mayfair Theatre. Paul Martin tetin and its editors ; directed the production from the|~ pig novel of Graham Greene, | Paul Muni in “Hi, Nellie’ is the| situation than we do. sereen feature at Locw’s State this| their fingets on the pt week. Jack Little and his radio or-| Whole Sou textile chestra is the head of the vaudeville | they say. “The editors are espe bill, in touch with the industry in Ct Jackie Cooper and Wallace Beery | ot’e and its environs.” will be starred in Stevenson's “Trea-| p. H. Hill “who knows more ear: Sane which Metro-Goldwyn | xtiles here than any nice. |according to the k “David Harum,” with Will Rogers | of Cae: has dev in the leading role, will open at the! portion of his life to Radio City Music Hall on Thursday. [things for mill owners. “Death Takes A Holiday,” based on| learned to be cagy the play of the same name, is now | ~uestions which anyone even s' m showing at the Paramount Theatre.; familiar with the indu Fredric March, Evelyn Venable and| have at his finger tips, he p Guy Standing head the cast. lignorance or hid behind the st Stories of the Hitler Terror in New Book Proletarian writers put the Hitler terror into dramatic stories, based on their experiences in the Nazi con-/ centration camps, in “Murder in Camp Hohenstein,” released this week by International Publishers. There are 35,000 people in the Camp Hohensieins of Germany, but the writers show how the working class struggle cannot be imprisoned behind barbed wires. Selling for 25 cents, “Murder in Camp Hohenstein” can he obtained at Workers’ Book- shops end branches or in quantities through International Publishers, 381 Fourth Ave. New York, IF I WERE COMMISSAR |ment, “That's in the code.” Miil Owner's Viewpoint His viewvoint — the viewpoint he mill owne: if it is in the code, the de by it. questions regarding the stretch-out system he says suavely: “That's prohibited by the code. I've never heard of such violations. If any such exist, workers can con plain to the Compliance Board.” I had already seen how much at- tention was paid to the worker eomplains to the Compliance Board The member of the board here who is supposed to represent labor’s in- terests himself had told me that the streteh-out system was common and that there was nothing he or t | board could do about it. Wor! | complaints are ignored here as in | New England. The textile manufacturer’ point as given by Hill follo' | view- dustry about one third over what it was last year or for that matter since the depression. Things before that. were pretty much at a stand- still, but 1933 was the best year since 1929. “Mill earnings have improved much and dividends aer above those in recent years. “These conditions apply whole industry in the South. “In Charlotte proper and iis suburbs there are about 20 mills, but it is impossible to get their payrolls and the number of employees, so I cannot give you an estimate on that.” (The number of employees have apparently been reduced for the amount of productién they are turn- to the little since the code went into ef- fect. If a mill with 200 workers, for instance, had a certain capacity fer a 12 hour shift, with each worker getting about $6 a week and that capacity has been maintained by 100 | workers, operating 8 hours a day and if, at the same time they got $12 a week instead of the former $6, and the payroll had not increased in comparison with its production, then it would be clear that work was be- ing doubled-up, as the workers all —By Gropper FRANK HEDLEY, president of |charge. That is why payroll and the I. R. T., would get a porter’s |employee numbers “cannot be job in the dainty “rest-rooms” of | gotten.”) eee ae the New York subways, . Suggested by the B. M. T. Sec- tion of the Transport Workers Union, Room 631, 80 E. lith St. The union gets the original to hang up on its wal IN AN effort to get his views on wages even under the code as compared with living costs todav he was evasive, though finally admitting “my groceries are costing me more now than they did six months ago.” Mill Owner: Live Near the Mills” “Business has increased in the in- | ing out, while payrolls have changed | Between’ 20 and 30 police ai which was obtained in the old buildi students. three months ago. The wor Jone’s dit 12 Negro and i attack was n by a provoca on the unveiling of the picture, door in the wall covered by t Jones, teacher of the : Do Not Previously he had said that the cost of living had dropped On questions of homes, the spokes- | man for the Southern mili owners | i few if any owned their own) e there is no incen- |tive for that when they can get a | house for 25 cents per room per week. | |Since there are four rooms to an/ | average house this would mean $4} ja month rent uding light and That's been the standard are now talk- | i 1e rent use | been so greatly in-| added | Whip | y Homes Used As ow: houses have al-| powerful whip in the | eo moment @ | ‘ dissatisfaction with| < s, he could not onl; | fired, but he and his family could! thrown out on the hi 3en he moved into ‘2 com- | owned house the worker gave | mill owner for good } ction,” y_hay N. R. A. to curtail overprot he mills, It wasn't t if a child’s parents | 13." have their p Teills if they th da living wage?” | had ea He did not ] come across many mill w e impres- the company store with its harges has been abolished R. A. code. Hill said there the code out that Gills. still hi om y On the touchy question of the heent, THM wos move than gathered that mills are | ig loud protests and nands eventually and ave now working as fast a: | > to stock up so that when | | the howl becomes too loud 2nd in- | sistent they will simpiy close the | doors and let the government or | the charities take care of the pro- | Either that or the claim | will be. made that “improved | machinery”: enables the mill to | turn owt as mush as before the | | wage increase on fewer hours with- j testers. | out asiding.te their list of employ- | ees, instead. of driving the worker | | to do. twice.as much as before. | | “T don’t “know whether there are | | fewer “hands now,” he explained. “I| |teld you thet payroll and employes | | figures -eannog be gotten. But you | want to -be very careful on this ques- | | tion because you've got to take into | |consideration improved machinery | efficiency. which has a great deal’ to | ith the present rate of produc- | Asked how many mills have put} lin new and. improved machir ry! |since the code went into effect, he | shrugged his shoulders. Though mill business is a third | greater than since the depression, | mill owners do not usually attribute |2t to the N. R.A. The C. W. A. is approved by them, but the N. R. A. is viewed with considerable disfavor hy most. “Canada reports a business in- erease over last year and they have no N. R, A.,” Hill said significantly. “The improvement may be due to a “rift of economic events which would have come about anyway,” The organizational activity of the United. Textile Workers, which is making some headway here, has the mill owners worried. Under John- son’r ruling a worker cannot be fired for joining a union and though -the mills would find excuses to weed members out if they could find them, they are unable to, and are fearful thes under this protective ruling mill workers will be organized and make their protests or demands as @ united body, \ to Protect Revolutionary Mural aded the big room re of unemployed clothes ng by 1 rk on the big mural was done under worker artists. Signal for a police the capitalist papers on the Police today saw 2 sign on the hich read: “Defend Workers’ Art loyed Councils, Y.C.L., and other (‘A Minority Report on * Catherine 29 Maurier, and otbers. \ fan bourgeois. film critics sh unanimous praise on the third filn in the historical series.. The praise was mostly given to that exiled Ger- man-Jewish actress, Elizabeth Betg- ner. They were also in agreement tf this present versi of the lif Catherine II of Russia (1729-96) Was pretty sentimentalized and far from | accurate. But, said they: It is good entertainment! Well, this is going to be a dissetting opinion and a minority report. To say that it is far from accurate Gr ‘that Korda’s production is a distortidn ‘of historical fact, is to imply that-‘the film has some truth. As a mattér ‘of? fact, “Catherine the Great’”’ doesrt jcome near enough to history’ tobe | even called a distortion. On the other ; hand, the interpretation is not one | solely designed for “entertainmenf*~ | pure and simple. This present filmi— {and the same-is true of all historical ae 14 when the}; | Tuesday | and Pascism, 21 10c in jof the ch | Room 12, films—is a political document, in“the final analysis. Catherine IT has @ép- utation among the bourgeois his |tilans and social scientists as an | lightened despot.” She was a great favorite of the rising merchant ant | tapitalist class of 18th century Russia | And even her friendly biographers can’t help telling about her debauch- ery and scheming, ; | However, Alexander Korda, director jof-“Henry the VIII” and now produ- |cer, and Paul Czinner, the direcior | husband of Elizabeth Bergner},; go them one better. This film gives usje | virginal (physical and moral) young wife of the mad Peter IT. And atone point in the film—this was before she jbecame Empress—she is informed that the peasants revolted in one of | the provinces for want of food, cloths ing, etc. She is asked her opinion Should soldiers and arms be sent-to the governor of the province to:queti the revolution? “No,” says Catherine, “revolutions that are based on: dé mands for food cannot be put down | with arms and bloodshed. If I were ruler and such a thing happened*T | would hang the governor of the prov \ince.” (She is supposed to havé béen {a disciple of Voltaire.) At this*point one is tempted to ask, “Oh, yeah?” us este ei e ally known young painter. TUNING IN | TONIGHT’S PROGRAMS WEAF—660 Ke, 7:00 P. M.—Mary Small, Songs 7:15—Billy Batchelor—Sketeh 7:30—Green Bros. Orch; Arlene Jackson, Songs 7:45—The Gold 8:00- s—Bketch Phil Duey, Baritone King Orch. Bernie Orch #d Wynn, Comedian; Voorhees Orch. -Crulse of’ the Seth Parker-Dramati¢ Sketch -Beauty—Mme. Sylvia 45—Robert. Simmons, Tenor; Sears Orch. J. B. Kennedy Trio hiteman Orch Vallee Orch. A. M—Denny Orch WOR—710 Ke. P. M.—Sports—Stan Lomax Be Announced rick Jim—Sketch fe Orch.; Frank Parker, Tenor ah Mineviteh, Harmonica Band | Morros Jester Betty | 'VEN # casual examination of»his- | 4 torical data would reveal “that | Catherine was a dissolite and: erim~- inal Woman. This same ‘peace-loving ruler (in the film) was responsible for |the enormous bloodshed wher “shé quelled (by bullets) the famous*Puge- choy rebellion, that threaten¢éd the foundation of the serf-owning societ? New York —| This same enlightened despot made it TTighes’ cost | illegal for the authorities to consider ‘Prestaent | the complaints brought by the- serfs | against the landlords; this reader “of Arlene Jackson, | Voltaire introduced serfdom in’ ‘fhe Ukrainian provinces, This loyal ruler Comedian doliers Quartet een, Songs; Current. Byen 30—Eddy Brown, 45—Sports—Boake Ca 11:00—Moonbeams Trio 11:30—Lano Orch. 00—Robbina Orch. WJZ—760 Ke * And; jr rte Car That Was Fingers—Sketch | es in Health—Dr. Herman| S0ld Russian military secrets to. fore leign powers. Her bloody partitioning gg aa | of Poland” for Prussia and others, led Edgar Guest, | +, the enormous hatred the Poles had | for the Russians. . a ‘You won't find the above picture of | Catherine in the film that’s at the | Astor Theater. Neither will yor find it in the Paramount version ‘with | “Legs” Dietrich as Cutherine “(“The’ Scarlet Empress”). Hollywood “aid London (and others) are out te make money, it is true. They are also tryiné to cash in on the success of “Herity. | the VIIIth.” But they certainly aren't | going to make historival films that“are detrimental to their class brothers. To this there is still “Tvan’ the Terrible,” the Soviet production, as the greatest historical film that ¢1es been produced. The reasons, of coutge. are obvious. eee As production “Catherine” ‘the | Great” is dull and full of unimagina~ | tive direction. The photography isa« uninspired as can possibly bé "The |sets are so gaudy and elaborate that | there are so™e scenes in which-iteis | difficul€ to tell a glittering chandelier and an actor apart. It is an obvida® | “quickie’"—trying to beat Paramount | Pictures and trying to be early enough \in the season so that money may be made. Douglas Fairbanks, Jr.,’ left | Hollyweod for art’s sake. After seeing. him as Peter, the insane hush: ot” WAR” — lecture by| Catherine, you wish he'd get wie ts... David L. Lee at ¥ Club Against War! himself. Whi Plains Rd. Tickets 2 15¢ at door, cert Orch Orch. g at Open- RCA. 7:00 P. and Marge Bill—Sketeh Cc. Hil erience lodies hig Orch. n Etting, Songs St. Louis Blues—Sketch WHAT’S ON THE IMPENDING advanee, Wednesday “SOVIE developm | Sena to the Daily Worker, 50 | 13th St, New York City, names of China ite: permpective for tap ure] those you know who are not i * lecture b: ‘0 riends | “ » hese People, ié8 W. 29rd st,| @°S of the “Daily,” but who wonld,« be interested in reading it. vie “AMUSEMENTS THE THEATRE GUILD _presents— RADIO CITY MUSIC e JOHN WEXLEY’S New Play 50 St & 6 Ave,—Show Place.of the Nation | THEY SHALL NOT DIE Opeet ee rae as Royale 2 8 Shwe hr Besse CLARK GABLE and Mats, Thurs, and Sat. 2201/1 CLAUDETTE COLBERT at i “It Happened One Night”. And a great MUSIC HALL STAGE SHOW™ | | | | i$ \ | EUGENE O'NEILL’s COMEDY AH, WILDERNESS! Fp thems sed'8te Wot B ea. 524 St, Wot Bway GUILD simserincasecz2 {|| 2° Jefferson Mh 8. ® | Noip MAXWELL ANDERSON’S New Play MARY OF SCOTLAND with HELEN PHILIP HELEN HAYES MERIVALE boogie! ‘Thea., 52@ 6t., W. ALY By.8:20.Mats.Thur.&Sat.2:20 TiEGFELD FOLLIES with FANNIE BRICE Willje & Eugene HOWARD, Bartlett SIM- MONS, Jane FROMAN, Patricia BOWMAN. WINTER GARDEN, B'way and 60th, Bvs. 8.30 Matinecs Thursday and Saturday. 2:30 Theatre Union’s Stirring Play LAST WEEKS THE ANTI-WAR HIT! PEACE ON EARTH CIVIC REPERTORY Thea,, Uith 8. & 6th Ay. WA, 01650. Bega. S45: 3 eye to $7 80 NO Rints, Wed. & Sat., 2:30. TAX Arrange Theatre Parties for your organiza-} tion by telephoning WAtkins 9-2451 O MORE LADIES A New Comedy by A. H. ‘Thomas with MELVIN DOUGLAS LUCILE WATSON MORCSCO Thea.. 25th, W. of Bway. Evs. 5:50, Mate, Wednesday and Saturday 2:48 JOAN BLONDELL & ADOLPH MENSOU-~ in “CONVENTION CITY. Added Feature:—“BELOVED” with. JOHN BOLES & GLORIA STUART LOT IN SODOM"| Tere Featurette Extraordinary |. ACME THEATRES&S&¢ Roperta A New Musical NEW AMOTERDAM, W. ana 60 840 Matinees Wednesday and Saturday 2:80